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Query: UNIPROT:P10415 (
Bcl-2
)
33,771
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bcl-2
expression has been associated with progression of
prostate cancer
from androgen-dependence to androgen-independence and may contribute to the relative drug-resistant phenotype typically observed in androgen-independent
prostate cancer
. Dunning-G rat
prostate cancer
cells transfected with a bcl-2 expression vector demonstrated resistance to apoptosis induced by adriamycin and, to a lesser extent, suramin. Use of adriamycin and suramin in combination, however, circumvents this bcl-2 associated drug resistance. Our findings indicate that combination drug actions may induce apoptosis in resistant malignant cell types with defective apoptotic pathways.
...
PMID:Combination adriamycin and suramin induces apoptosis in bcl-2 expressing prostate carcinoma cells. 762 22
Major differences in the long-term clinical response to castration therapy of prostatic carcinoma suggests intertumoral differences in cellular response and defines a need for identification of patients with an eventually positive outcome as well as those in need of additional treatment. Using morphometry, monoclonal antibodies against
Bcl-2
, c-myc, Ki-67, and p53 proteins, and an in situ method to visualize apoptotic cells, we examined the short-term response of prostatic tumors to castration in core biopsies from 18
prostatic cancer
patients taken the day before and 7 days after castration. At the histological level, 3 tumors seemed practically unaffected by castration. In 15 tumors, castration induced vacuolization of tumor cell cytoplasm and decreases in nuclear area and Ki-67 index. In these 15 tumors, apoptotic index was significantly increased in 6, principally unaffected in 6, and decreased in 3. The 6 tumors responding with an increase in apoptotic index were WHO grade 1 or 2 and negative for p53, c-myc, and
Bcl-2
or contained only few
Bcl-2
- or c-myc-positive tumor cells before therapy. The 12 tumors in which apoptotic index was unaffected or decreased were WHO grade 2 or 3 and immunopositive for one or more of p53,
Bcl-2
, and c-myc proteins before therapy. The
Bcl-2
index was significantly increased in 10 patients. Prostatic tumors may respond in a variety of possibly predictable ways to castration therapy including a decrease in apoptotic index. The magnitude of these responses are not correlated in individual tumors, suggesting that the common classification of prostatic tumors as either androgen dependent (dying after castration) or independent (not responding at all to castration) may be an oversimplification.
...
PMID:Castration therapy rapidly induces apoptosis in a minority and decreases cell proliferation in a majority of human prostatic tumors. 777 76
The clinical course of
prostate cancer
is highly variable and cannot satisfactorily be predicted by histological criteria alone. To study the prognostic significance of
Bcl-2
and p53 overexpression in
prostate cancer
, 137 consecutive radical prostatectomy specimens were examined by immunohistochemistry. Both
Bcl-2
and p53 were associated with malignant phenotype.
Bcl-2
expression was more frequent in pT3 tumors (31% positive) than in pT2 tumors (5% positive, P = 0.001). p53 overexpression (found in 8%) was associated with high Gleason score (P = 0.03) and increased tumor growth fraction (Ki67 labeling index (LI); P = 0.017). Survival analysis showed that
Bcl-2
expression (P = 0.03), high Ki67 LI (P = 0.018), high grade (P = 0.0037), advanced local stage (P = 0.0005), and positive lymph nodes (P = 0.026) were predictors of progression. The combined analysis of Ki67 LI and
Bcl-2
allowed the distinction of three groups with different clinical outcome. Prognosis was best in
Bcl-2
-negative tumors with low Ki67 LI, worst in
Bcl-2
-positive tumors with high Ki67 LI, and intermediate in the remaining tumors (P = 0.03). These data suggest that altered expression of both
Bcl-2
and p53 play a role in
prostate cancer
progression. Combined analysis of factors regulating both apoptosis and cell proliferation may be relevant in
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of Bcl-2 in clinically localized prostate cancer. 862 24
Bcl-2
expression is associated with the progression of
prostate cancer
from androgen-dependence to androgen-independence.
Bcl-2
is an integral membrane protein which localizes to mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and the nuclear envelope. Using spectrofluorometry and laser confocal microscopy, the ability of bcl-2 to modulate intracellular Ca2+ was examined in the Dunning G prostate carcinoma cell line following apoptosis induction by adriamycin. Adriamycin and thapsigargin, an endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-pump inhibitor, were effective inducers of apoptosis in control, but not bcl-2 transfected, cells. Treatment with adriamycin was accompanied by a sustained rise in cytoplasmic Ca2+ in control and bcl-2 transfected cells. An increase in intranuclear Ca2+ was observed in control cells only. Apoptosis induction by thapsigargin was associated with an increase in cytoplasmic Ca2+ in control cells that was not detected in the resistant bcl-2 transfectants. Ca2+ was excluded from nuclei isolated from bcl-2 expressing cells, but was sequestered in control nuclei, following the addition of ATP. These findings suggest that bcl-2 may regulate levels of intranuclear Ca2+ independently of cytosolic Ca2+ levels. The ability of bcl-2 to modulate, directly or indirectly, sustained increases in both cytosolic and intranuclear Ca2+ may provide a common basis for bcl-2 function in different subcellular compartments.
...
PMID:Apoptosis suppression by bcl-2 is correlated with the regulation of nuclear and cytosolic Ca2+. 864 65
The incidence of programmed cell death (apoptosis) and cell proliferation was investigated in the normal and malignant human prostate to define the significance of their potential deregulation in human
prostate cancer
. The incidence of "spontaneous" apoptosis was analyzed using an in situ end-labeling procedure for detection of nucleosomal DNA fragmentation, as well as the pattern and topological localization of expression of the 2 proteins regulating apoptosis, TGF-beta1, and bcl-2, in 40 primary prostatic adenocarcinomas with varying tumor grades, 17 lymph nodes positive for metastatic
prostate cancer
and 9 normal prostate specimens. The basal level of cell proliferation of the different prostatic cell populations in the same specimens was determined, utilizing the Ki-67 nuclear antigen. Localized
prostate cancer
cells exhibited a relatively low rate of apoptosis, which was significantly lower than the apoptotic index of normal prostate glandular epithelial cells. Metastatic prostate tumor cells, however, exhibited a significantly higher apoptotic index compared with localized
prostate cancer
cells. A significant increase in the proliferative index was detected in prostatic tumors compared with the normal gland (5-fold), and there was an even more marked elevation in the proliferative index of the metastatic prostate tumor cells compared to the normal prostate epithelial cells (approximately 24-fold). Immunohistochemical analysis of normal and malignant prostate specimens revealed a predominant TGF-beta immunoreactivity in the glandular epithelial cells, while the stromal component was totally negative. There was a significant increase in the levels of TGF-beta in primary prostatic tumors compared to the normal prostate.
Bcl-2
expression was detected among certain populations of tumor epithelial cells in a mutually exclusive topological distribution pattern for apoptosis. In marked contrast, neither TGF-beta1 nor bcl-2 immunoreactivity was detected in metastatic prostate tumor cells, despite their high proliferative and apoptotic rates. Balancing the prostatic growth equation for the prostatic tumor epithelial cell populations revealed a substantial net increase in cell number in both primary and metastatic prostate cancers. This loss of apoptotic control in favor of cell proliferation may be responsible for
prostate cancer
initiation and progression.
...
PMID:Incidence of apoptosis and cell proliferation in prostate cancer: relationship with TGF-beta1 and bcl-2 expression. 890 Mar 67
We have investigated the ability of several drugs commonly used in the treatment of human cancer to induce
bcl2
phosphorylation and cell death in human cell lines derived from acute leukemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, and
prostate cancer
. The results of this analysis indicate that drugs affecting the integrity of microtubules induce bc12 phosphorylation, whereas anticancer drugs damaging DNA do not. Comparison of the effects of taxol and its analogue, taxotere, indicates that taxotere is capable of inducing
bcl2
phosphorylation and apoptotic cell death at 100-fold lower concentrations than taxol. Induction of cancer cell death through phosphorylation of
bcl2
thus provides an opportunity not only for more refined targeting of therapeutic drugs but for understanding of an important pathway leading to apoptosis. Phosphorylation of
bcl2
in drug-treated cancer cells occurs in G2-M, the phase of the cell cycle in which this class of drugs is active. No induction of
bcl2
phosphorylation occurs in chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells that overexpress
bcl2
but are blocked at G0-G1. Thus, prevention of polymerization or depolymerization of cellular microtubules by this class of cancer therapeutic drugs causes phosphorylation of
bcl2
, abrogating the normal antiapoptotic function of
bcl2
and initiating the apoptotic program in the cycling cancer cells; these results are consistent with a normal physiological role of
bcl2
as "guardian of microtubule integrity."
...
PMID:Bcl2 is the guardian of microtubule integrity. 900 May 60
Flow cytometry and microscopy analyses have demonstrated that 9-nitrocamptothecin (9NC) induces apoptosis in prostate carcinoma LNCaP, DU-145 and PC-3 cells grown in culture or as xenografts. 9NC induces apoptosis regardless of the ability of the cells to induce tumors following xenografting into nude mice. Detection of apoptosis by flow cytometry was preceded or accompanied by increased cell size, loss of nuclear structure and vacuolization, as the tumor regressed, but no visible chromatin fragmentation. This is the first demonstration that 9NC is curative for human prostate carcinoma xenografts in the nude mouse model in the absence of detectable drug-induced toxicity during and after tumor regression. These findings indicate that 9NC may develop into a chemotherapeutic drug for the effective treatment of
prostate cancer
patients. Further, there was no apparent correlation of the steady-state level of the apoptosis-regulating proteins,
Bcl-2
, Bcl-XL, Bax and Ich-1, with tumorigenicity of the prostate cells xenografted in nude mice, aggressiveness of tumors grown in nude mice, and induction of apoptosis by 9NC. However, the TIAR protein was present at markedly high levels in all prostate carcinoma cell lines and this may correlate with their susceptibility to 9NC-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:Establishment of human prostate tumor xenografts in nude mice and response to 9-nitrocamptothecin in vivo and in vitro does not correlate with the expression of various apoptosis-regulating proteins. 941 21
Hormonally insensitive
prostate cancer
is a relatively slow-growing, but usually fatal, disease with no long-term treatment options. Transformation of normal prostate cells to a malignant phenotype often involves corruption of the apoptotic machineries.
Bcl-2
protein is one of the key inhibitors of apoptosis and is often unregulated in advanced
prostate cancer
. The
prostate cancer
cell line DU-145 was used as a model of a hormonally insensitive, advanced
prostate cancer
. Cell growth in liquid culture was significantly inhibited by antisense
Bcl-2
oligonucleotides compared with control sense oligonucleotides; inhibition by these oligonucleotides was significantly enhanced on combination with the synthetic retinoid N-(2-hydroxyphenyl)all-trans-retinamide (2-HPR). Interestingly, growth inhibition occurred in the absence of apoptosis as measured using two assay techniques. We hypothesize that in these recalcitrant cells the apoptotic pathway is compromised at several levels, and
Bcl-2
may play another role in promoting cell growth. The use of
Bcl-2
antisense oligonucleotides plus 2-HPR may provide a novel approach to therapy of hormone-resistant
prostate cancer
.
...
PMID:Growth inhibition of DU-145 prostate cancer cells by a Bcl-2 antisense oligonucleotide is enhanced by N-(2-hydroxyphenyl)all-trans retinamide. 951 52
The histological classification or typing of prostate carcinoma combined with histological grading according to Gleason or WHO with nucleolar subgrading are the most important prognostic factors in carcinoma of the prostate.
Prostatic cancer
is the most common malignancy in adult males and is the second-most-common cause of cancer death in the USA. The histological Gleason grade may be reduced if only a small amount of tumor tissue is present in the core needle biopsy, in contrast to the combined histological and cytological grading according to WHO with nucleolar subgrading. When there is sufficient carcinomatous tissue in the core needle biopsy, there is no difference from that in radical prostatectomy tissue, because most cases of prostatic carcinoma are highly malignant. DNA cytometry, immunohistochemical analysis with Ki67/Mib1 or molecular pathological studies with the tumor suppressor gene p53 or apoptosis suppressing oncoprotein
bcl2
and the density of blood capillaries may be helpful as additional prognostic factors, but only together with the results of the primary histological section. For comparison of grading results with the international literature both grading systems should be used according to Gleason and WHO with nucleolar subgrading.
...
PMID:[Prognostic factors of prostatic carcinoma]. 954 41
The prognostic significance of Ki-67, p53, and
Bcl-2
expression was evaluated in
prostate cancer
patients with lymph node metastases. Immunohistochemical staining of archived material obtained from 56 patients was performed by the streptavidin-biotin method. Univariate survival analysis showed that a Ki-67 labeling index (Ki-67 LI) of > or = 8.4 in the primary tumor identified a group of patients with a significantly poorer prognosis (P < 0.001). furthermore, a Ki-67 LI of > or = 8.7 in the nodal metastatic tumor was also associated with a poorer prognosis (P < 0.01). Multivariate analysis showed that the Ki-67 LI of primary tumors (P < 0.01) and lymph node metastases (P < 0.01) had independent prognostic value. p53 and
Bcl-2
expression had no prognostic value in patients with
prostate cancer
and lymph node involvement. The Ki-67 LI has more prognostic value than p53 and
Bcl-2
expression for patients with
prostate cancer
that has spread to the lymph nodes.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of Ki-67, p53, and Bcl-2 expression in prostate cancer patients with lymph node metastases: a retrospective immunohistochemical analysis. 958 63
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